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Common scam patterns reported across the US. Based on FTC-reported scam types and phone fraud cases filed with the Consumer Sentinel Network.
Called saying I owed $847 in back taxes and would be arrested within 24 hours. They knew my full name. I ran the number first — found 34 other people had already reported it as an IRS scam this month.
Said it was my bank's fraud department. Claimed someone tried to make a $1,500 Apple purchase on my account. They knew my last four digits. The number traced back to a VoIP line registered to a scam operation in three states.
Claimed to be Apple Support. Said my account was compromised and I needed to download AnyDesk so they could fix it. Looked up the number — burner VoIP line, no registered owner, flagged by 19 users as tech support fraud.
Showed up as a local number — same area code. Trusted it and almost called back. Ran the lookup: spoofed number tied to a Zelle gift card scam. The real owner of that number had no idea it was being used.
Illustrative examples based on common scam patterns reported to the FTC. Numbers shown are for illustrative purposes only.
Sound familiar? Run the number before you call back.
Thousands of people checked a suspicious number today. Takes 10 seconds.People are running lookups and reporting suspicious numbers every minute. Here's what's being flagged today.
Over 12,000 numbers reported in the last 30 days
Numbers shown are illustrative examples based on reported scam patterns.
In the last 12 months, Americans lost $25.5 billion to phone-based scams alone. Robocalls, fake IRS agents, bank impersonators, and romance scammers — they all start with one phone call.
Source: FTC Consumer Sentinel Network Data Book, 2024. Phone fraud losses include imposter scams, robocalls, and phone-based identity theft.
Criminals use constantly evolving tactics — fake bank alerts, IRS threats, loved-ones-in-distress calls, and tech support cons. They already know your name, your area code, and sometimes your bank. A 10-second lookup is the only way to know for sure who's really calling.
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Our tool accesses data from national, state, and local public records — sources that Google and free lookup tools can't reach.
See the real name, address history, linked profiles, carrier type, and whether the number has been reported by others — before you decide what to do.
Free tools show basic caller ID. We access carrier-level data including line type — the biggest red flag scammers use.
Data compiled from licensed sources updated in real time — not the 2-year-old results you get from free sites.
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